Abstract Landscape
Date1960s
Label TextBorn to a distinguished Suzhou family of scholar-officials in 1907, C.C. Wang belonged to the last generation that received a classical education in the arts. An eminent student of the painter Wu Hufan (1894-1968), Wang mastered traditional brush and ink techniques before moving to New York in the late 1940s, and became influenced by Western museum collections and contemporary artists. Blending abstract expressionism and Chinese brushwork, the bleeding of ink and the changing tonality gives the mountain a misty impression, while the dry brushstrokes exhibit the pulsating movement of the artist's hand. This painting goes beyond representation, as Wang demonstrates that brush and ink-as an artistic expression-is not subservient to form.
Object number2008.80
ProvenanceShirley Sun
Photo CreditPhoto: Elizabeth Mann
Published ReferencesSilbergeld, Jerome, "Mind Landscapes: The Paintings of C.C. Wang", University of Washington Press, Seattle, WA, 1987Credit LineGift of Dr. Shirley Sun
Dimensions12 x 33 in. (30.5 x 83.8 cm)
MediumHandscroll; ink on paper
Japanese
1278
Object number: 48.169
Japanese
13th century
Object number: 48.170
Object number: 51.225